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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

'Arm the Dolls'

755 replies

WrongKindOfFeminist · 05/07/2026 10:23

Pictured is Natacha Kennedy of Goldsmiths.

T shirt says 'Arm the Dolls'

'Arm the Dolls'
OP posts:
Thread gallery
18
SabrinaThwaite · 06/07/2026 21:18

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 20:45

You’re very lucky to feel that way

Why am I ‘lucky’?

I know I’m female, but what female feelings should I be experiencing?

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:20

SabrinaThwaite · 06/07/2026 21:18

Why am I ‘lucky’?

I know I’m female, but what female feelings should I be experiencing?

You are lucky because you don’t feel female or male, you just are female.

viques · 06/07/2026 21:21

SexIsReal · 05/07/2026 11:20

AI so all needs verified but anyone wanting to know about this misogynist bully.

Also AI incorrectly sexed her but read he for she.

Natachca Kennedy is a lecturer in the Department of Educational Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London. She joined in 2007 and teaches across various programmes.

She is a trans woman who has publicly identified as such since at least the late 2000s/early 2010s, describing herself as having known she was a girl from around age five. She previously worked as a primary school teacher and has a background in journalism (including for The Guardian). She earned an MA (Distinction) from the Institute of Education and a PhD in Sociology from UCL in 2019.

Her academic profile centers on transgender studies, particularly trans youth, “cultural cisgenderism,” and critiques of what she terms “organised transphobia” or “gender-critical” perspectives. She is co-chair (with Prof. Sally Hines) of the Feminist Gender Equality Network (FGEN), described as an international network of intersectional feminists aimed at countering “anti-trans propaganda.” She has also been involved in trans activism through groups like Camden LGBT Forum, Trans Media Watch, and organizing Transgender Day of Remembrance.3058
Key Research and Publications
Kennedy’s work often frames trans identities as valid from a very early age and critiques societal structures that she sees as enforcing a binary “cisgender” norm. Notable pieces include:

  • “Transgender children: more than a theoretical challenge” (2010, co-authored/published under Natacha Kennedy and Mark Hellen) — Argues that many trans people become aware of their gender identity very early.71
  • “Cultural Cisgenderism: Consequences of the Imperceptible” (keynote/paper) — Discusses how everyday assumptions of cisgender norms harm trans people, especially children.69
  • Papers on young trans people’s “epiphanies,” agentic learning, and deferral before coming out.
  • Recent work (2025) critiquing the UK puberty blocker ban/Cass Review as harmful to children, contrasting it with “gender-critical” approaches, which she sees as denying trans subjectivity.49

Some critics have noted her use of both Natacha Kennedy and Mark Hellen (a prior or dual name) in publications and staff listings, raising questions about self-citation or dual profiles at Goldsmiths.

Focus on Attacking Gender-Critical Views
This is the area where Kennedy has drawn the most public controversy. She is a prominent voice equating “gender-critical” feminism (views prioritizing sex-based rights, biological sex as immutable for most legal/social purposes, and concerns over impacts on women/girls and children) with transphobia, far-right alliances, and harm.

  • 2018 Smear Campaign Allegations: Kennedy was reported (via The Times) as orchestrating or centrally involved in a closed Facebook group (Trans Rights UK) effort to create a “list” of academics and universities deemed “unsafe” for students due to gender-critical staff. Targeted institutions included Sussex (Kathleen Stock), Reading (Rosa Freedman), and others like Bristol, Warwick, and Oxford. The group discussed shaming professors, filing hate crime reports, and advising students to avoid certain departments/courses. All named academics in reports were women. Kennedy reportedly framed it as protecting students from “dangerous” environments. She declined comment at the time. Goldsmiths defended free speech in principle.2262
  • She has characterized gender-critical positions as rooted in “fragility,” allied with the far right/religious conservatives, and involved in “mirror-propaganda” against trans people. Her work and FGEN activities position opposition to self-ID, puberty blockers for minors, or male inclusion in female spaces as exclusionary and harmful.52
  • Public statements and events: She has spoken at conferences with panels on “Gender ‘Critical’ Feminism” and “Trans Exclusionism.” Recent examples include celebrating or harshly commenting on the death of Jenni Murray (former Woman’s Hour presenter, seen as gender-critical), with posts wishing her grave to be treated as a “gender-neutral bathroom.”
  • She argues that “gender-critical” influence stems from right-wing media campaigns and warns of chilling effects on trans-inclusive policies in universities (e.g., in response to Office for Students actions).

Kennedy frames her activism as defending trans human rights and intersectional feminism, viewing gender-critical feminism as a threat that undermines broader equality. Critics (including gender-critical feminists, some academics, and women’s rights groups) see her actions as attempts to no-platform, smear, or intimidate dissenters in academia, abusing institutional positions, and contributing to a toxic climate around sex/gender debates—especially regarding youth transitions, single-sex spaces, and free inquiry.

Broader Context at Goldsmiths
Goldsmiths has a reputation for progressive/left activism, with past controversies involving its LGBT society and free speech issues. Kennedy represents a strand of trans-inclusive educational studies that influences teacher training and policy views on gender in schools. Her role as a lecturer gives weight to her advocacy on trans youth issues.

Some people just try too hard don’t they?

SabrinaThwaite · 06/07/2026 21:23

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:20

You are lucky because you don’t feel female or male, you just are female.

But can you quantify why you don’t feel male?

Do you feel female? And if yes, what makes you feel female?

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:41

SabrinaThwaite · 06/07/2026 21:23

But can you quantify why you don’t feel male?

Do you feel female? And if yes, what makes you feel female?

But can you quantify why you don’t feel male?
For me it’s always been a deep discomfort with my male body, and that I never quite belonged.

Do you feel female? And if yes, what makes you feel female?
Yes, but this is very hard to articulate well. It just feels right to me.

murasaki · 06/07/2026 21:42

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:41

But can you quantify why you don’t feel male?
For me it’s always been a deep discomfort with my male body, and that I never quite belonged.

Do you feel female? And if yes, what makes you feel female?
Yes, but this is very hard to articulate well. It just feels right to me.

But is it not just 'not male', which i can kind of see? Not male doesn't equal female.

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:47

murasaki · 06/07/2026 21:42

But is it not just 'not male', which i can kind of see? Not male doesn't equal female.

I don’t know for sure tbh. I think if it was just ‘not male’, I wouldn’t feel so strongly that I should’ve been born female.

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 21:48

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:47

I don’t know for sure tbh. I think if it was just ‘not male’, I wouldn’t feel so strongly that I should’ve been born female.

What makes you think you should have been born female?

RogueFemale · 06/07/2026 21:57

WrongKindOfFeminist · 05/07/2026 10:23

Pictured is Natacha Kennedy of Goldsmiths.

T shirt says 'Arm the Dolls'

Dolls are male transvestites who imagine they 'pass'.

The bricks, those who don't 'pass', are never mentioned, but they comprise 99.9% of transvestite men.

Trans-identifying women [who oddly don't shout about their 'right' to compete against biological men in sports, nor demand to be imprisoned in mens prisons, nor threaten to gun down women in school shootings] are never mentioned.

EdithStourton · 06/07/2026 21:59

MoistVonL · 06/07/2026 18:50

Damn, I took so long to type that Edith got in first and more eloquently.

I forgot about the men's viewpoint, and the dyed-in-the-wool be-kinders (rather than the cynics who decide to be nice to this person this time).

Theunchosenone · 06/07/2026 22:00

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:47

I don’t know for sure tbh. I think if it was just ‘not male’, I wouldn’t feel so strongly that I should’ve been born female.

for a male to claim he “feels female”, he must using sexist, offensive, male centred tropes of how females feel, don’t you think? Women don’t wake up going “oooh I feel female today”.

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:01

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 21:48

What makes you think you should have been born female?

Edited

I know this isn’t a satisfying answer, but I just know

EdithStourton · 06/07/2026 22:04

EdithStourton · 06/07/2026 14:30

Nah, you're dodging.
But to me, 'presenting as female' just means being a woman in the world, whether you dress like Julie Burchill or Madonna.

Your turn.

<twiddles thumbs>
STILL waiting.
.
.
.
I'm nothing if not tediously persistent.

murasaki · 06/07/2026 22:07

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:01

I know this isn’t a satisfying answer, but I just know

But you can't have any idea of what it is to be female, just your fantasy version, which seems to be based on the opposite of male.

SabrinaThwaite · 06/07/2026 22:08

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:01

I know this isn’t a satisfying answer, but I just know

What perceived elements of being female do you identify with?

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 22:11

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:01

I know this isn’t a satisfying answer, but I just know

What parts?

GreyskySexRealistsky · 06/07/2026 22:13

murasaki · 06/07/2026 22:07

But you can't have any idea of what it is to be female, just your fantasy version, which seems to be based on the opposite of male.

...and to add to this, women don't go around thinking " well I don't feel male, therefore I must be female"

We all are just who we are.

murasaki · 06/07/2026 22:13

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 22:11

What parts?

It's always the boobs....

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:17

murasaki · 06/07/2026 22:13

It's always the boobs....

I think this is the second time you’ve said that this thread. What makes you think that?

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 22:18

murasaki · 06/07/2026 22:13

It's always the boobs....

Or the essence - or a feeling.

None of which makes a a man remotely female.

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 22:18

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:17

I think this is the second time you’ve said that this thread. What makes you think that?

Well, you tell us what makes you think you are female.

Theunchosenone · 06/07/2026 22:24

SirChenjins · 06/07/2026 22:18

Or the essence - or a feeling.

None of which makes a a man remotely female.

Wasn’t one TIM saying it was some kind of constellation or something?

GreyskySexRealistsky · 06/07/2026 22:25

Theunchosenone · 06/07/2026 22:24

Wasn’t one TIM saying it was some kind of constellation or something?

A constellation of data points 🙄

Theunchosenone · 06/07/2026 22:25

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 21:47

I don’t know for sure tbh. I think if it was just ‘not male’, I wouldn’t feel so strongly that I should’ve been born female.

So women are just “not-male” to you? Mate!! No. Really just no.

DumbfoundedAndUnhappy · 06/07/2026 22:32

Theunchosenone · 06/07/2026 22:25

So women are just “not-male” to you? Mate!! No. Really just no.

No, women are people who are biologically female. And I know I should’ve been born with that biology

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